I'm recently learning C, and there is something that I cannot understand.
Here is the example,
int a = -1;
unsigned int b = a;
In this example, the book says,
"a is auto-casted to 'unsigned int' and then assigned to 'unsigned int b'."
but... why? I mean
'int a' is -1, so it's bit string is supposed to be
1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111
In Computer's point of view, all it has to do is just copying the bits to unsigned int b
there's no need to convert 'signed int' to 'unsigned int' !
I can't understand, why they auto-cast 'signed int' to 'unsigned int' before copy the bits?
-1
is an impossible value for an unsigned variable. So what SHOULD happen if you assign an impossible value?b
isunsigned int
and you are copying those bits over to it froma
. There really is no change to the bits, only the way they are handled in as an unsigned value instead of signed, and the highest bit no longer is a sign bit but part of the number.